- First, I wanted to offer a word of thanks to Dime Boxes, Night Owl, Highly Subjective and Completely Arbitrary, and A Penny Sleeve for Your Thoughts for their recent card giveaways!
- Second, my post thumbnails continue to not show up on other blogrolls. I have done some searching to try to figure out how to fix this, but no luck. If anyone can solve this distressing development, there's a PWE of cards with your name on it. EDIT: it randomly worked this time!
So it was fun to get to flip through some cards again for a little while. I started with his vintage boxes, which I hadn't really looked at much before. I'm the type that likes to know at least a ballpark of what I might pay for something. The hang up for me has been that his vintage cards are all in boxes by set, but are not priced. But since I was card-starved, I decided to pay whatever he quoted once I brought everything to him to check out. Since I bought some other unpriced items, I'm not sure exactly what I paid for these, but it was probably in the 50 cent range. So not terrible.
Anyway, it was fun to pick up some vintage cards that I thought I'd show off here.
First up are some new "lesser knowns" for my Frankenset/mini-collection:
1969 Topps #128, Tommie Aaron 1969 Topps #287, Jose Tartabull 1970 Topps #401, John Harrell/Bernie Williams |
Tommie Aaron is part of one of my favorite baseball trivia questions, because a lot of people don't even know about him: Which brothers combined for the most home runs in MLB history? Hank and Tommie Aaron (768). Hank had 755, and Tommie had 13. The DiMaggios (Joe, Vince, and Dom) are second with 573 combined home runs.
Jose Tartabull hung around to play part of nine seasons in MLB. He is Danny Tartabull's father.
I didn't even know about this Bernie Williams before I saw this card. He batted .192 in 102 games over four MLB seasons.
1970 Topps #317, Billy Conigliaro/Luis Alvarado 1970 Topps #53, John Kennedy |
Billy Conigliaro actually played two seasons on the same Red Sox squad as his more famous brother, Tony.
John Kennedy's middle name is Edward (JFK's brother, long time Senator Ted Kennedy, had the given name Edward). This John Kennedy card is of course made more awesome because it's a Pilots card.
Next up are a group of cards that sometimes appear in lists of most-awkward or funniest baseball cards. It was fun to pick some of these up.
Next up are a group of cards that sometimes appear in lists of most-awkward or funniest baseball cards. It was fun to pick some of these up.
1969 Topps #38, Zoilo Versalles |
The former MVP was not happy in this photo, but it wasn't because he hated playing for the Padres. They picked him up in the expansion draft, but traded him to Cleveland before the 1969 season began.
1970 Topps #252, Lowell Palmer |
I wonder if those were prescription sunglasses.
1966 Topps #74, Don Mossi |
Let's just say this photo may have benefitted from some zooming out.
Next up is one of two cards I have depicting a catcher writhing in pain. This one was clearly a result of the now obsolete home plate collision.
1973 Topps #542, Pat Corrales |
If you're curious about the other "catcher in pain" card, here it is:
1992 Score #311, Jeff Reed |
Back to vintage. I've known for some time that I needed a vintage Dick Allen card, because everyone needs a vintage Dick Allen card. By 1974, dumb Topps had finally stopped calling him Richie or Rich.
1974 Topps #70, Dick Allen |
The final pickup I'll show here was Dime Boxes' recently crowned second Frankenset winner! I was really pumped to see this beauty among the other 73s.
1973 Topps #273, Chris Speier |
The card store guy hinted online on his still active Facebook page that he planned on doing another sale. I hope he does, because I barely got to look at the dime boxes this time!
Well, I'm an American. So I'm voting for the John Kennedy.
ReplyDeleteThe Corrales card is part of the Cardboard Appreciation Hall of Fame:
ReplyDeletehttp://nightowlcards.blogspot.com/p/cardboard-appreciation-hall-of-fame.html
The interesting thing about that card is Corrales did not get run over at all. He barely even touched Fergie Jenkins on the play. Here is the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xTGSnTYsytE
The Mossi, Palmer, and Allen are fantastic.
ReplyDeleteBoth catcher cards are favorites in my binder. You picked up some nice vintage! Kennedy's facial features do resemble the famous family's bone structure. Kind of odd.
ReplyDelete